The DC-10 will burn approximately 15000 pounds of fuel per hour at cruise, which is equal to 2143 gallons. Divide by 600 miles = 3.57 gallons per mile.
The QE2 cruise ship consumed around 380 tons of fuel daily when at full speed, which translates to about 80 gallons per mile traveled.
About six pounds.
A nautical mile is 1.1 land miles.
Cruise ship fuel capacity depends on many factors. These include the type of fuel the ship uses, the size and design of the ship, the duration of the cruise, and the length of each leg of the cruise before it reaches a port where fuel can be replenished. It also depends on the amount of time the ship will be docked in various cruise ports rather than cruising.
The amount of fuel used by Cruise Ships will vary. It depends on their size. The Queen Victoria Cruise Ship can load upto 3000 tons of fuel. The 3000 tons are considered to be heavy fuel type. These ocean liners can also carry over 140 tons of gas oil. Typically the amount taken up will be 12 tons every 60 minutes. On average it uses up to 300 gallons to the mile. The burnout rate is between 50 to 100 tons every day depending on the model. . This applies to the typical cruise ship. Larger ships can carry much more. Hope this helps.
As with all travel, the cost of a Princess Cruise varies on location and the time of travel. Price examples include $687 to 800 for a six day cruise to Alaska. A cruise off of the California coast is $1,139 for six to eight days and so on.
Gallons per mile? No vehicle burns that much fuel.
The engine will consume 22.75 gallons of fuel during warmup, burnout, staging, and the quarter-mile run., actual fuel economy is around 16gals per mile
one mile
Cruise insurance typically does not cost much money. The benefits are great because they reimburse the expenses of your travel in the event of a storm, an unexpected family or travel crisis/cancellation.
generally---- if you can get a cruise for under a hundred dollars per person, per night, then you are getting a good deal... -Travel Agent